Tag: Transit

  • What Everett’s Transit Merger Means for You as a Rider: A 2026 Resident’s Guide to the Community Transit Annexation

    What Everett’s Transit Merger Means for You as a Rider: A 2026 Resident’s Guide to the Community Transit Annexation

    Q: I ride Everett Transit or Community Transit today. What actually changes for me if the merger goes through?

    A: If you live inside Everett city limits and use the bus, four practical things change after the Everett Transit → Community Transit annexation is approved and phased in: (1) one agency, one fare structure, one app, one schedule for every bus you ride inside the city; (2) your sales tax rate on purchases in Everett goes up by roughly 0.6 percentage points, reflecting Community Transit’s 1.2% transit tax replacing Everett Transit’s ~0.6%; (3) existing Everett Transit passes will be honored during an approximately one-year transition per public statements from both agencies; (4) route changes inside Everett will be evaluated as part of Community Transit’s regular service change cycle — potentially more coverage from the higher tax base, potentially some consolidation where Everett Transit and Community Transit routes already overlap.

    The rider’s cheat sheet

    Today: Two agencies. Everett Transit runs local Everett routes and some downtown circulators. Community Transit runs Swift BRT, commuter buses to Seattle and Lynnwood, and the rest of Snohomish County’s network. After the merger: One agency. Community Transit operates all of it. Your OneBusAway, your ORCA tap, your transfer from a Swift Blue Line bus to a local Everett route — all in one system.

    What happens to your pass

    Both agencies have publicly committed to honoring existing Everett Transit fare media during the transition. The interlocal agreement (the legal document the two agencies are drafting through summer 2026) will spell out exactly how long. Expect a unified Community Transit fare structure to phase in over approximately a year after the agreement is signed. If you buy monthly, watch for official notice before making your next annual commitment.

    Your bus route, specifically

    Everett Transit routes 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 12, 18, 29, and 70 are the most likely to be reviewed for integration with neighboring Community Transit service. Some may keep their current alignment under new numbers. Some may consolidate with overlapping Community Transit routes. And some may actually expand frequency or span of service — the stated goal from both the mayor and the Community Transit CEO is to grow service using the higher sales tax revenue, not cut it. Specific route decisions happen in the interlocal agreement and the first post-merger service change cycle.

    The sales tax change

    Inside Everett city limits, the transit portion of sales tax would rise from ~0.6% to 1.2% — a 0.6-point increase. On a $100 purchase in Everett, that is an extra $0.60. On a $25,000 car purchase, that is an extra $150. It does not apply to groceries, prescription medication, or most services. It does apply to most retail and restaurant transactions inside the city.

    Why this isn’t going to your ballot

    The 2025 state law (amended in 2026) that made this pathway available treats transit annexation as a government-to-government action between two PTBAs (Public Transportation Benefit Areas). The legal trigger is a public hearing plus approval from both boards, not a voter referendum. If you want to weigh in, the public hearing(s) — expected in the September to October window at City Hall and at Community Transit board meetings — are the formal venue. Council member contact information is on everettwa.gov.

    What to do now if you’re a rider

    Keep riding. Nothing changes until the interlocal agreement is signed, which is targeted for late 2026, and then the phase-in takes roughly another year. Watch for official service change notices from Everett Transit and Community Transit, sign up for Community Transit’s rider alerts, and if you have strong feelings about specific Everett Transit routes, attend the public hearings when they are scheduled.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Will Swift bus rapid transit change?

    No. Swift is already Community Transit and continues as-is.

    Will my commuter bus to Seattle change?

    Sound Transit Express buses and future Everett Link light rail are operated by Sound Transit, a separate regional agency, and are not part of this annexation.

    Will fares go up right away?

    No. Existing Everett Transit fare media will be honored during transition per public statements from both agencies. A unified Community Transit fare structure will phase in over approximately one year after the agreement is signed.

    Will routes inside my Everett neighborhood be cut?

    Not automatically. Route decisions happen in the interlocal agreement and the first post-merger service change cycle. Both the mayor and Community Transit CEO have publicly stated the goal is service expansion funded by the higher sales tax — not cuts. The public hearings in the fall are where specific neighborhoods can weigh in.

    Do I pay more in property tax?

    No. This is a sales tax change inside Everett city limits only, not a property tax measure.

    Related coverage

    See the complete 2026 Everett Transit merger guide, our original coverage of the April 22 announcement, and our resident guide to Everett’s 2027 budget deficit.

    Related Coverage From Tygart Media’s Exploring Everett Series

  • For Boeing and Paine Field Commuters: What the 2026 Everett Transit Merger With Community Transit Means for Your Drive to Work

    For Boeing and Paine Field Commuters: What the 2026 Everett Transit Merger With Community Transit Means for Your Drive to Work

    Q: I work at Boeing Everett, at Paine Field, or somewhere along Seaway Boulevard. What changes for my commute if Everett Transit merges into Community Transit?

    A: For aerospace workers commuting to the Boeing Everett factory, Paine Field, or the Seaway Boulevard industrial corridor, the Everett Transit → Community Transit annexation announced on April 22, 2026 matters for three reasons: (1) the Swift Blue Line and Swift Green Line — already the backbone of bus service to Paine Field and the 99 corridor — are operated by Community Transit and get a fully unified local feeder network inside Everett; (2) any route consolidation inside Everett that connects neighborhoods to the Swift lines and to Boeing could see schedule improvements funded by Community Transit’s 1.2% sales tax replacing Everett’s ~0.6%; (3) long-term, a single regional transit operator is the same agency that will connect you to Sound Transit’s future Everett Link light rail stations — including the Paine Field scenario that remains in active planning. For shift workers, the headline is: more consistent service planning across the county, funded by roughly 2x the transit tax revenue inside Everett.

    Why aerospace commuters should care

    The Boeing Everett factory, the IAM 751 Machinists Institute, Paine Field, and the surrounding supplier corridor on Seaway Boulevard and Airport Road employ tens of thousands of people. A significant share live in Everett neighborhoods — Casino Road, Silver Lake, Bayside, View Ridge-Madison, Evergreen — and need to reach the factory for shift changes that happen outside traditional 9-to-5 windows. Transit service to those shift windows has historically been the weakest link in Everett’s bus network. A consolidated Community Transit with more revenue per Everett-resident rider can specifically fund off-peak and early-morning/late-night service improvements that benefit aerospace shift patterns.

    The Swift connection

    Community Transit’s Swift Green Line already serves the Paine Field and aerospace corridor with 10-to-15-minute frequency most of the day. The Swift Blue Line on Evergreen Way and SR 99 connects south Everett and Lynnwood. Both are already Community Transit. What changes after the merger is the local feeder network inside Everett that connects neighborhoods to the Swift lines — the short-hop routes that take you from your apartment on Casino Road to the Blue Line station, or from your house off Airport Road to the Green Line. Those feeders are currently split between the two agencies. After annexation, they become one planning exercise, which should tighten timed transfers.

    What about the drive? Parking? The commute lot at the factory?

    Direct drive commute is unaffected by a transit annexation. If you drive, you still drive. What the merger does do over time: give Community Transit more budget to recruit choice riders — people who could drive but ride because the bus is faster or more reliable — out of the single-occupant-vehicle pool. That is the mechanism by which factory-area congestion on Airport Road and Seaway Boulevard typically improves. It’s slow. But it’s the lever that exists.

    Shift work, early mornings, and nights

    The 737 North Line activation, the 777X production ramp, and the 767/KC-46 transition all put Boeing Everett in a place where three-shift operations are the norm. Early morning and late-night bus service — historically thin on Everett Transit — is exactly the kind of capacity a larger Community Transit funded by a 1.2% sales tax is positioned to add. The interlocal agreement and the first post-merger service change cycle will show whether the agencies actually program that capacity. Watch public hearings in fall 2026 and the Community Transit service change proposals in early 2027.

    The light rail tie-in

    Sound Transit’s Everett Link extension — covered in our 2026 complete guide — remains the biggest long-term variable for Paine Field commuters. The 2026 planning scenarios range from the original 2036 Everett Station timeline to a phased delivery that reaches Paine Field first. Either way, the bus network that connects you to the light rail stations — including potentially a Paine Field station — is designed by Community Transit. A unified Community Transit covering all of Everett simplifies that design.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Will Community Transit add more early-morning buses to Paine Field?

    Possibly. The higher sales tax revenue inside Everett (1.2% vs. ~0.6%) is explicitly earmarked for service expansion per public statements from both agency leaders. Actual schedule decisions happen in the interlocal agreement and the first post-merger service change cycle (expected 2027).

    Does this change Sound Transit Everett Link or commuter bus to Seattle?

    No. Sound Transit is a separate regional agency and its Express buses and future light rail are not part of this annexation.

    What about the Boeing employee bus or carpool program?

    Employer-sponsored commute programs are not operated by Everett Transit or Community Transit and are unaffected by the annexation.

    Swift Green Line and Swift Blue Line — do they change?

    No. Both are already Community Transit and continue as-is. They are, in fact, the backbone the rest of the network will be rebuilt around.

    Will my sales tax go up if I live outside Everett but work in Everett?

    Sales tax is collected based on where the purchase is made, not where you live. If you make purchases inside Everett city limits, you would pay the higher 1.2% transit portion. Purchases outside Everett — in unincorporated Snohomish County, Mukilteo, Lynnwood — are unaffected by this specific annexation.

    Related coverage

    See the complete 2026 Everett Transit merger guide, our aerospace worker guide to the IAM 751 Machinists Institute, and our breakdown of Sound Transit’s Everett Link extension.

    Related Coverage From Tygart Media’s Exploring Everett Series

  • The Everett Transit Merger Into Community Transit: The Complete 2026 Guide to the Annexation, the No-Ballot Pathway, and What It Changes

    The Everett Transit Merger Into Community Transit: The Complete 2026 Guide to the Annexation, the No-Ballot Pathway, and What It Changes

    Q: What does the Everett Transit merger with Community Transit actually mean, and why is this happening now?

    A: On April 22, 2026, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin and Community Transit CEO Ric Ilgenfritz jointly announced the resumption of efforts to annex Everett Transit into Community Transit’s service district. Under a 2025 state law amended in 2026, that annexation no longer requires a public vote — only approval by the Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board of Directors, following a public hearing. The two agencies aim to have an interlocal agreement ready for a final vote by the end of 2026, with service changes phased in over roughly one year afterward. If approved, Community Transit’s 1.2% transit sales tax would replace Everett’s current ~0.6% rate inside city limits, roughly doubling dedicated transit revenue. The stated motivation is light rail readiness: Sound Transit’s Everett Link extension is moving toward Everett Station and Paine Field in the next decade, and a single regional operator simplifies the bus network that feeds it.

    Why the Everett Transit merger matters more than a typical agency reorg

    This is the biggest structural change to transit in Everett since Everett Transit became its own municipal system. Cassie Franklin and Ric Ilgenfritz didn’t pick April 22 by accident — they picked it because the political plumbing is finally in place. In 2025, the Washington State Legislature passed a law allowing Public Transportation Benefit Areas (like Community Transit) to annex city-operated transit agencies through an interlocal agreement rather than a voter referendum. That law was amended in 2026 to clarify the process. The first city in the state that can use it at scale is Everett, and the agencies want to be first.

    The timeline in plain English

    Summer 2026: Everett Transit and Community Transit draft the interlocal agreement, work through labor and asset transfer provisions, and hold public hearings. Fall 2026: The Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board of Directors take up the agreement for a final vote, expected before the end of the calendar year. 2027: If approved, Everett Transit becomes a service division inside Community Transit, with a phase-in period of approximately one year. The 1.2% Community Transit sales tax rate replaces Everett’s current ~0.6% Everett Transit rate inside the city. Bus routes, fare structure, driver hiring, and facilities consolidate under one roof.

    What actually changes for riders

    Community Transit runs the Swift bus rapid transit lines, every Snohomish County commuter bus into Seattle and Lynnwood, and a larger fleet with a broader route network than Everett Transit. For riders who already use both agencies to stitch a trip together, this is mostly good news: one fare, one app, one schedule, one customer service line. For riders who stay inside Everett’s boundaries, routes may consolidate and evolve — and that is the piece the public hearing phase is meant to surface. Advocates at Keep Everett Transit have voiced concern that a larger agency might deprioritize intra-Everett service. Franklin and Ilgenfritz have both publicly said expanded service, not cuts, is the goal — driven by the higher sales tax rate unlocking roughly 2x the dedicated transit revenue.

    Why no ballot measure this time

    The last serious merger conversation — around 2020 — stalled because the path forward appeared to require a public vote, and no one wanted to run that election during COVID. The 2025 law removes that barrier. Whether that is good governance is a live debate. HeraldNet’s editorial page carried a reader letter on April 23 arguing the merger should go to a ballot anyway. Proponents counter that transit annexations are technical government-to-government agreements, not policy referendums, and that the public hearing requirement plus the council vote provide sufficient democratic accountability.

    The light rail context you can’t ignore

    Sound Transit’s Everett Link extension is the subtext of every transit decision in this city right now. ST3 promised light rail to Everett Station by 2036; 2026 planning scenarios range from that original timeline to phased delivery reaching Paine Field first. Whichever scenario lands, the bus network that feeds light rail needs to be designed as one system, not two. A unified Community Transit handling Everett, Lynnwood, Mukilteo, and the Swift corridors is operationally simpler than coordinating across two agencies. That operational case — more than the sales tax math — is what moved this off the shelf in 2026.

    What to watch next

    Interlocal agreement draft (expected July–August 2026). Public hearings at Everett City Hall and Community Transit board meetings (expected September–October). Final Everett City Council vote and Community Transit Board vote (expected November–December 2026). If approved, look for a joint transition office to stand up in early 2027 and the first route changes to publish in Community Transit’s standard service change window.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Will my Everett Transit pass still work after the merger?

    Yes. During the transition period (approximately one year after the agreements are signed), both agencies have publicly committed to honoring existing fare media while transitioning riders to a unified Community Transit fare structure. Specific fare policy will be finalized in the interlocal agreement.

    Will I pay more in sales tax if the merger goes through?

    Yes, inside Everett city limits. Community Transit collects 1.2% of taxable sales for transit; Everett Transit currently collects approximately 0.6%. The difference — about 0.6 percentage points — would apply to most purchases made in Everett after the transition.

    Why isn’t this going to a public vote?

    A 2025 state law (amended in 2026) allows Public Transportation Benefit Areas like Community Transit to annex municipal transit agencies via an interlocal agreement approved by both governing boards after a public hearing. No ballot measure is required under that statute.

    What happens to Everett Transit drivers and staff?

    The interlocal agreement will include labor and asset transfer provisions. Ric Ilgenfritz has publicly indicated the intent is to absorb Everett Transit’s workforce into Community Transit. Specific terms, union contract alignment, and seniority questions are the kind of detail the summer drafting phase is designed to resolve.

    Does this affect Swift bus rapid transit or Sound Transit service?

    Swift is operated by Community Transit and is unaffected operationally. Sound Transit Express buses and future Everett Link light rail are operated by Sound Transit, a separate regional agency, and are also unaffected by this specific annexation.

    How does this connect to Sound Transit’s Everett Link light rail?

    A unified bus network is easier to design as a light rail feeder than two coordinated agencies. When Everett Link opens (timelines vary by scenario but target the 2030s), buses inside Everett will need to connect riders to stations at Everett Station, Mariner, Lynnwood, and potentially Paine Field — all within Community Transit’s existing service pattern.

    Can the Everett City Council still vote this down?

    Yes. The interlocal agreement requires affirmative votes from both the Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board of Directors. Either body can reject the agreement, send it back for amendment, or decline to schedule a vote.

    Related coverage

    See our source brief on the April 22 Everett Transit merger announcement, our guide to Everett’s 2027 budget decisions, and our breakdown of Sound Transit’s Everett Link extension.

    Related Coverage From Tygart Media’s Exploring Everett Series

  • Everett Transit Is Merging Into Community Transit: What Yesterday’s Announcement Actually Changes for Riders

    Everett Transit Is Merging Into Community Transit: What Yesterday’s Announcement Actually Changes for Riders

    Q: What did Everett and Community Transit announce on April 22, 2026?
    A: Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin and Community Transit CEO Ric Ilgenfritz announced the resumption of joint efforts to consolidate Everett Transit into Community Transit. The two agencies plan to draft an interlocal agreement this summer, aim for a final vote before the end of 2026, and phase in service changes over about a year. Under a 2025 state law amended in 2026, the merger can be approved by the Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board after a public hearing — no ballot measure required.

    Everett Transit Is Merging Into Community Transit: What Yesterday’s Announcement Actually Changes for Riders

    We knew this conversation was coming back. On Wednesday, April 22, 2026, Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin and Community Transit CEO Ric Ilgenfritz stood together and restarted one of the biggest quiet-but-consequential conversations in Snohomish County: folding Everett Transit into Community Transit as a single, countywide system.

    If you ride the 7, the 8, or any of the routes that loop between downtown Everett, Casino Road, and Silver Lake, this is your future. And if you care about how Everett connects to Link light rail when it finally shows up, this is arguably the most important local story of the week — bigger than the stadium vote, bigger than the next Port of Everett press release.

    Here is what we actually know, what is still being drafted, and what neighbors are already asking.

    What Was Actually Announced on April 22

    The formal announcement came as a joint statement from the City of Everett and Community Transit. The headline: the two agencies will draft an interlocal agreement for the City of Everett to annex into Community Transit’s service district. That draft will move through the Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board of Directors this fall, with the hope of having a final version ready to vote on before the end of 2026.

    If both bodies approve, service changes would phase in over about a year. In the transition, the existing bus networks of both agencies would largely continue to run the way they do today. The point is not to yank routes on day one. The point is a slow merge where riders see better frequency, fewer transfers, and a single system map where Everett isn’t a walled-off island inside the county.

    Why This Is Suddenly Possible After Years of False Starts

    Everett and Community Transit have looked at this merger before. It has failed before. What’s different in 2026 is a state law, originally passed in 2025 and amended this year, that allows a public transportation benefit area like Community Transit to annex a municipal transit agency through an interlocal agreement — approved by the boards of both governing bodies after a public hearing. No countywide ballot measure. No citywide ballot measure. No two-year petition campaign.

    That is the mechanism. The politics have also shifted. With Sound Transit facing a reported $34.5 billion system-wide deficit and the Everett Link extension timeline already pushed from 2036 into the 2037–2041 window, both the city and the county have a strong interest in making sure that when light rail does land at Everett Station, the local bus network feeding it is unified and legible, not two separate agencies handing off riders at the boundary.

    Mayor Franklin framed it pretty bluntly. Through annexation, Everett can offer residents more connections, more destinations, more frequent buses, shorter waits, and evening service that actually exists.

    The Sales Tax Question Is the One Everybody’s Asking

    This is the part that will show up on a lot of kitchen tables. Everett Transit is funded by a local transit sales tax of roughly 0.6 percent. Community Transit’s rate is roughly 1.2 percent. If the annexation goes through, Community Transit’s rate applies in Everett.

    That math is real. The city and county are already acknowledging it in their communications. The pitch they are making to riders and to taxpayers is that the service delivered in exchange — more frequency, better span of service, integration with the rest of the county, and a cleaner handoff to Link light rail — is worth the step up. Some riders will agree. Some won’t. And the “Keep Everett Transit” organizing we’ve seen over the last couple of years has not disappeared; expect a real public hearing to feel like a real public hearing.

    There’s also a letter already running in the Daily Herald arguing the merger should go to a public vote, not just a council and board vote. Whether that argument picks up momentum over the next few months is one of the things to watch.

    How This Fits Into Everything Else Happening on the Waterfront

    Zoom out. Everett is building out the Millwright District and Waterfront Place at the same time. The AquaSox and USL stadium is heading for a pivotal design-funding vote on April 29. Eclipse Mill Park on the Riverfront is on a two-phase build that runs through 2028. The Sound Transit Everett Link extension is somewhere on the horizon, delayed but not dead.

    All of that assumes a transit network that can actually move people between the new places. Right now, the bus ride between the waterfront and Silver Lake isn’t the same agency as the bus ride between Silver Lake and Lynnwood — which means transfers, separate ORCA card logic for passes, and a system that feels fragmented by geography instead of by trip. A merger does not fix frequency overnight. It does set the table for the next capital plan to fix frequency as one network instead of two.

    Timeline, If Everything Holds

    Here is the rough calendar as Franklin and Ilgenfritz described it:

    • Summer 2026: Staff from Everett and Community Transit draft the interlocal agreement. Public outreach runs alongside it.
    • Fall 2026: Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board take up the draft. Public hearings in both bodies.
    • End of 2026: Target for final approval of the interlocal agreement.
    • 2027 into 2028: Service integration phased in over roughly a year. Route numbers, pass products, and scheduling gradually consolidate.

    That timeline can slip. Interlocal agreements are messy documents — they have to resolve labor representation, asset transfers, paratransit service coverage, and debt. Everett Transit has buses, a fleet yard, maintenance staff, and a paratransit operation that have to land somewhere in the final structure.

    What We’re Watching Over the Next Six Months

    A few things will tell us whether this merger is actually going to land. First: how detailed and transparent the interlocal agreement draft is when it goes public in late summer. Second: whether the fall public hearings surface any major structural objection that the two boards didn’t anticipate. Third: whether Everett Transit operators and maintenance workers — who are represented labor — end up with a clear path into Community Transit’s workforce. Fourth: whether the city finds a clean way to handle the sales tax transition so it doesn’t show up as a surprise on one month’s receipts.

    If all four land cleanly, Everett heads into 2027 as part of one countywide system. If any of them stumbles, this conversation rolls into 2027 and the next council session. Either way, yesterday was the moment the merger went from “studying it” to “drafting the agreement.” That’s real movement.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Will this go to a public vote?
    Under the 2025–2026 state law that makes the annexation possible, the merger can be approved by the Everett City Council and the Community Transit Board after a public hearing, without a citywide or countywide ballot measure. At least one letter to the Daily Herald has argued it should still go on a ballot. The formal process, as described by the two agencies on April 22, does not require a public vote.

    When would the merger actually take effect?
    The two agencies are aiming for a final vote on an interlocal agreement by the end of 2026. Service integration would then phase in over roughly a year — so many visible changes would roll through 2027 and into 2028.

    What happens to the Everett Transit sales tax?
    Everett’s current transit sales tax is about 0.6 percent. Community Transit’s is about 1.2 percent. If the annexation goes through, Community Transit’s rate applies inside Everett.

    Do my current routes disappear?
    Not on day one. The two agencies have said the existing networks will largely be preserved during the transition and integrated over about a year. Expect route numbers and some coverage patterns to change as the single-network map is drawn, but not a hard cutover.

    How does this connect to Sound Transit Link light rail in Everett?
    The stated rationale for merging includes making sure the local bus network is unified when the Everett Link extension eventually opens. A single agency running the last-mile bus service to and from Everett Station is easier to plan around than two separate agencies handing riders off at the city line.

    Who pushed this forward now?
    Mayor Cassie Franklin on the Everett side and CEO Ric Ilgenfritz on the Community Transit side made the April 22 joint announcement. The state law that makes the mechanism possible was sponsored by Sen. Marko Liias of Edmonds.

    What happens to Everett Transit employees?
    That is one of the main issues the interlocal agreement has to resolve. The details — labor representation, wages, benefits, seniority — will be in the public draft when it is released later this year.

    Deeper Coverage in the Exploring Everett Series

    For a more comprehensive treatment of the issues raised in this article, see:

  • Sound Transit’s Everett Link Extension: The Complete 2026 Guide to Light Rail’s Uncertain Future

    Sound Transit’s Everett Link Extension: The Complete 2026 Guide to Light Rail’s Uncertain Future



    Q: Will Sound Transit build light rail to Everett Station?
    A: That decision hasn’t been made yet. The Sound Transit Board will vote on a restructured ST3 System Plan in summer 2026. At least one scenario under consideration would not complete the extension to downtown Everett Station. The first phase to Paine Field may open by 2037; the full connection to Everett Station could arrive between 2037 and 2041 — or not at all under a phased scenario.

    Sound Transit’s Everett Link Extension: The Complete 2026 Guide to Light Rail’s Uncertain Future

    In April 2026, the future of light rail in Everett is genuinely uncertain in a way it has never been before. Costs for the Everett Link Extension have climbed between $200 million and $1.1 billion above the 2021 estimate. Sound Transit is weighing scenarios that could defer or eliminate the connection to Everett Station entirely. And the Sound Transit Board will make its defining decision on the ST3 System Plan this summer.

    This is the complete guide to where the Everett Link Extension stands, why it matters, what the scenarios are, and what you can do before summer 2026.

    What Is the Everett Link Extension?

    The Everett Link Extension is a planned 16-mile light rail line connecting Snohomish County communities — including Lynnwood, Mariner, Paine Field, and Everett Station — to the regional Sound Transit light rail network. It was approved as part of the ST3 ballot measure by Puget Sound voters in November 2016, with an original 2021 cost estimate of $6.6 billion.

    The extension would add six stations north of the existing Lynnwood Link terminus: West Alderwood, Ash Way, Mariner, SW Everett Industrial Center (serving the Paine Field corridor), SR 526/Evergreen, and Everett Station at the heart of downtown. Those six stations represent a fundamental change in how Everett connects to the region — a car-free, congestion-proof link from Paine Field to Seattle’s core.

    The Cost Problem: $200M to $1.1B Above Estimates

    Sound Transit attributes the cost escalation to factors that have hammered infrastructure projects across the country: inflation running above projections, tariffs on construction materials, labor shortages in the skilled trades, supply chain disruptions, and rapidly escalating right-of-way acquisition costs. Together, these have driven costs 20 to 25 percent above the 2021 Financial Plan baseline.

    For the Everett extension specifically, that means a range of $200 million to $1.1 billion in added cost — on top of the original $6.6 billion. The project could cost as much as $7.7 billion. Set against Sound Transit’s described $34.5 billion system-wide budget gap, the Everett extension is one of the agency’s most expensive unresolved commitments.

    The Timeline Has Already Slipped — And Could Slip Further

    When Snohomish County voters approved ST3 in November 2016, the Everett Link Extension was projected to open in 2036. That date has already moved. Sound Transit’s current projections put the first phase — reaching Paine Field — as early as 2037. The full extension to Everett Station carries an estimated opening window of 2037 to 2041.

    A five-year uncertainty window for a single project’s completion date signals how unresolved this extension’s future actually is. For Everett residents who incorporated light rail into their long-term housing, employment, and transportation decisions, the uncertainty is not abstract.

    The Three Scenarios — Including One That Stops Short

    The most consequential revelation from April 14’s standing-room-only town hall at Everett Station: Sound Transit is evaluating at least three approaches to its budget challenge, and at least one scenario would not complete the connection to Everett Station downtown.

    Sound Transit’s Board has been considering approaches ranging from restructuring the phasing of ST3 projects — with some extensions potentially terminating before their original endpoints — to pursuing new financing mechanisms and federal funding sources. Previous Sound Transit documents describe options that could have the Everett extension terminate before reaching downtown Everett Station, leaving the corridor without its planned terminus for years beyond what voters expected.

    For a city that anchored its long-term transit planning around being the northern terminus of Puget Sound light rail, this scenario drew sustained and pointed questions from the standing-room crowd at Everett Station on April 14.

    Who Was in the Room — and What They Said

    Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers and Everett Mayor Cassie Franklin attended the April 14 town hall in person, taking questions alongside Sound Transit staff. Both officials have been consistent advocates for the full extension to Everett Station as a pillar of the region’s transportation and economic development future.

    The day before the town hall, the Everett Herald’s editorial board published a direct call for Sound Transit to “exhaust every option to keep light rail on track” — a signal of the urgency local elected officials and media are placing on this summer’s decision. Snohomish County’s elected Sound Transit Board representatives have similarly advocated against any scenario that defers or eliminates the Everett Station terminus.

    Why the Paine Field Station Is Especially High-Stakes

    The SW Everett Industrial Center station — commonly called the Paine Field station — is one of the most consequential stops in the entire ST3 project list. Paine Field is home to Boeing’s widebody assembly operations, the largest factory building by volume on earth. It’s also home to Paine Field International Airport (PAE), Snohomish County Airport, and over 600 aerospace suppliers that make up the $14 billion Snohomish County aerospace economy.

    A light rail connection to Paine Field would be transformative for the 30,000-plus workers commuting to the corridor daily — reducing parking pressure, cutting commute times from Seattle and south King County, and connecting the aerospace workforce to regional transit. If the Paine Field station is preserved but the Everett Station connection is deferred, Boeing and aerospace workers would gain access while Everett’s downtown remains disconnected.

    What Happens Next — The Summer 2026 Decision

    The Sound Transit Board is expected to take up ST3 System Plan restructuring in summer 2026. That vote will determine whether the Everett Link Extension proceeds on a modified but still-complete schedule, gets phased to stop short of Everett Station, or faces another restructuring.

    Between now and then, Sound Transit will continue accepting public comment. The April 14 town hall was one of multiple public engagement events the agency is holding across the ST3 service area.

    How to Have a Say Before the Board Votes

    • Attend Sound Transit Board meetings, which include public comment periods. Board meetings are held at Union Station in Seattle.
    • Submit written comments at soundtransit.org
    • Contact Snohomish County’s elected Sound Transit Board representatives — they vote on behalf of Snohomish County
    • Reach Everett Mayor Franklin’s office at (425) 257-8700 or Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers’s office at (425) 388-3460
    • Sign up for Sound Transit project updates at the Everett Link Extension participation page

    For more on Everett’s transit and development future, read our coverage of the April 14 town hall, the Millwright District’s new office pre-leasing push, and the 600+ aerospace companies that make Everett’s economy run.

    Frequently Asked Questions: Sound Transit Everett Link Extension

    What is the Sound Transit Everett Link Extension?

    The Everett Link Extension is a planned 16-mile light rail line connecting Lynnwood, Mariner, Paine Field, and Everett Station to the regional Sound Transit network. It was approved by Puget Sound voters in the ST3 ballot measure in November 2016.

    How much does the Everett Link Extension cost?

    The original 2021 estimate was $6.6 billion. As of 2026, Sound Transit estimates costs have increased between $200 million and $1.1 billion above that figure, potentially placing the total cost at up to $7.7 billion.

    When will the Everett Link Extension open?

    Sound Transit currently projects the first phase to Paine Field opening as early as 2037. The full extension to Everett Station carries an estimated opening window of 2037 to 2041. Both are subject to change depending on the Sound Transit Board’s summer 2026 decisions.

    Could light rail stop short of Everett Station?

    Yes. Sound Transit is weighing at least three scenarios, and at least one would not complete the connection to Everett Station downtown. No final decision has been made — the Board is expected to vote in summer 2026.

    What stations are planned for the Everett Link Extension?

    Six stations are planned north of Lynnwood Link: West Alderwood, Ash Way, Mariner, SW Everett Industrial Center (Paine Field), SR 526/Evergreen, and Everett Station.

    How can Everett residents comment on the Sound Transit light rail decision?

    Residents can attend Sound Transit Board meetings (open to public comment), submit written feedback at soundtransit.org, contact Snohomish County’s Sound Transit Board representatives, or reach out to Mayor Franklin’s office or County Executive Dave Somers’s office.

    What is Sound Transit’s $34.5 billion budget gap?

    Sound Transit describes a $34.5 billion system-wide shortfall between projected costs and its current financial plan — driven by inflation, tariffs on construction materials, labor shortages, and right-of-way cost escalation. The Everett Link Extension is one of several projects affected by this gap.

    Why does the Paine Field station matter so much?

    The Paine Field station would serve Boeing’s widebody assembly facility, Paine Field International Airport, and 600+ aerospace suppliers that employ tens of thousands of workers. A direct light rail connection to this corridor is considered one of the most transformative transit investments in the region.

  • Moving to Everett? Here’s What Sound Transit’s Light Rail Uncertainty Means for You

    Moving to Everett? Here’s What Sound Transit’s Light Rail Uncertainty Means for You



    Q: Can I ride light rail from Everett to Seattle?
    A: Not yet from Everett itself — but you can already connect. Lynnwood Link opened in 2024, with trains running to Lynnwood City Center station. Community Transit buses connect Everett to Lynnwood for the light rail transfer. Direct light rail to Everett Station is projected for 2037-2041, depending on Sound Transit’s summer 2026 decisions.

    Moving to Everett? Here’s What Sound Transit’s Light Rail Uncertainty Means for You

    One of the most common questions from people considering a move to Everett is the commute question: can I realistically get to Seattle without a car? The answer in 2026 is: yes, with transfers — and possibly via direct light rail by 2037 to 2041, depending on a critical Sound Transit Board vote coming this summer.

    Here’s the honest picture for people who are choosing a home in Everett with one eye on future transit.

    What Exists Right Now: The Lynnwood Transfer

    Lynnwood Link light rail opened in 2024, extending Seattle’s Link light rail network to Lynnwood City Center station — about 15 miles south of downtown Everett. From Everett, Community Transit’s Swift Blue Line BRT and express bus routes connect to Lynnwood City Center in 20-35 minutes, depending on your Everett starting point.

    From Lynnwood, Link light rail carries you to the University of Washington in about 22 minutes and to downtown Seattle (Westlake Station) in about 35 minutes. Total Everett-to-Seattle time via transit: approximately 65-80 minutes, depending on connections. By car, the same trip takes 30-45 minutes off-peak and can exceed 90 minutes during peak hours — with the added cost of parking, which in downtown Seattle often runs $25-40 per day or $300-400 per month.

    The Promise: Direct Light Rail to Everett Station

    The Everett Link Extension — voted for by Puget Sound residents in 2016 — would add six stations connecting Lynnwood Link north through Mariner, Paine Field, and ultimately to Everett Station in downtown Everett. When complete, a rider at Everett Station would be able to board light rail directly and reach downtown Seattle in roughly 55-65 minutes, with no transfers.

    That direct connection would meaningfully change what it means to live in Everett and work in Seattle — or work at Boeing’s Paine Field campus and live in Seattle. It’s the kind of transit investment that anchors long-term real estate value and livability.

    The 2026 Crisis: Costs Have Climbed Sharply

    As of spring 2026, Sound Transit faces costs for the Everett extension that have climbed between $200 million and $1.1 billion above the original $6.6 billion estimate — putting the total at potentially $7.7 billion. The agency has described a $34.5 billion system-wide budget gap driven by inflation, tariffs on construction materials, labor shortages, and rising right-of-way costs.

    The Sound Transit Board is weighing at least three scenarios for restructuring the ST3 System Plan, with a decision expected in summer 2026. One scenario would not complete the connection to Everett Station — instead stopping the extension at or near Paine Field. That outcome would leave Everett Station without direct light rail for years beyond current projections.

    What This Means If You’re Choosing a Neighborhood Now

    If you’re buying a home or signing a lease in Everett in 2026, here’s the practical reality to factor in:

    Near Everett Station (Broadway, Bayside, downtown core): These neighborhoods benefit most from a completed light rail extension to Everett Station — and face the most disappointment if that scenario is deferred. Right now, Community Transit’s express bus connections to Lynnwood are your best transit option. The downtown core has walkable services and Everett Station’s existing Amtrak Cascades and Sounder connections.

    Near Paine Field / Casino Road / SW Everett: The Paine Field station appears to be preserved in all Sound Transit scenarios, meaning transit access to the SW industrial corridor may arrive on a relatively consistent 2037 timeline regardless of what happens to Everett Station.

    Neighborhoods near I-5 (Everett Way, Beverly/Bayside): Good access to express buses running south along the corridor to Lynnwood Link. Current transit commute times to Seattle via Lynnwood transfer are manageable for daily commuters.

    Comparing Everett to Alternatives

    For context: moving to Everett in 2026 puts you approximately 30-35 miles north of Seattle. Comparable Seattle-area transit commutes: Tacoma to Seattle (55 miles) via Sounder takes 63 minutes; Bellevue to Seattle (10 miles) via Link takes 22 minutes; Redmond to Seattle (15 miles) via Link takes 30 minutes. Everett’s Lynnwood transfer option compares favorably to Tacoma’s commute and unfavorably to Eastside options.

    Everett’s median home price of approximately $530,000 (2026) versus Seattle’s $850,000-plus median makes the commute tradeoff financially significant for many buyers.

    For more context on Everett neighborhoods, see our coverage of Casino Road’s South Everett community, the complete Sound Transit Extension guide, and Lowell, Everett’s oldest neighborhood.

    FAQ: Light Rail and Moving to Everett

    Is there light rail in Everett right now?

    No direct light rail in Everett yet. Lynnwood Link, which opened in 2024, extends to Lynnwood City Center station about 15 miles south. Community Transit buses connect Everett to Lynnwood for the transfer to Link.

    When will light rail reach Everett Station?

    Sound Transit currently estimates 2037-2041, subject to the Board’s summer 2026 decisions. One scenario under consideration would not complete the Everett Station connection.

    How long does the commute from Everett to Seattle take on transit?

    Currently, approximately 65-80 minutes via Community Transit to Lynnwood Link, then Link to downtown Seattle. By car in off-peak traffic, 30-45 minutes; peak hours can exceed 90 minutes on I-5.

    Will property values near Everett Station increase if light rail is built?

    Light rail stations consistently increase property values in surrounding areas. Studies of completed Link stations show 10-25% value premiums within a quarter mile of stations over a 5-10 year period. Everett Station-area properties have partially priced in the anticipated extension — the unresolved timeline creates some pricing uncertainty.

    What Community Transit routes connect Everett to Lynnwood Link?

    Community Transit Swift Blue Line BRT and express routes 113, 201, and 202 connect Everett to Lynnwood City Center station. Check commute options at commutransit.org.

  • Sound Transit Everett Link Extension: 2026 Status, Timeline and What the $500M Gap Means

    Sound Transit Everett Link Extension: 2026 Status, Timeline and What the $500M Gap Means

    Quick Definition: The Everett Link Extension is a planned 16-mile light rail segment connecting Lynnwood City Center to Everett Station with six new stations. Sound Transit targets a 2037 opening to SW Everett Industrial Center and 2041 full service to Everett Station, pending closure of a $500 million funding gap.

    We’ve been watching the Everett Link Extension timeline shift around for a few years now, and 2026 is shaping up to be one of the most consequential years for the project since voters approved ST3 back in 2016. This spring, Sound Transit is preparing to release its Draft Environmental Impact Statement — the document that narrows down exactly where the tracks, stations, and operations facility will go. This is what you need to know right now.

    Where the Project Stands in April 2026

    The Everett Link Extension remains in its Planning Phase, with the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (EIS) expected to be released for public review in 2026. The Draft EIS is a big deal — it’s the point where Sound Transit presents the preferred alignment, the six station locations, and the environmental and community impacts of building 16 miles of elevated light rail through Snohomish County.

    Once the Draft EIS is released, there will be a public comment period. Then Sound Transit prepares the Final EIS, currently expected around 2027. The Sound Transit Board formally votes on the route and station locations after the Final EIS — no shovels in the ground before that point.

    • 2026: Draft EIS release and public comment period
    • 2027: Final EIS and Board decision on preferred route and stations
    • 2030–2036: Construction phase
    • 2037: Target service opening to SW Everett Industrial Center
    • 2041: Projected full service to Everett Station

    The Six Planned Stations — What We Know

    The Everett Link Extension adds six new stations to the regional Link light rail network, connecting riders from the Lynnwood City Center terminus northward into Snohomish County. Here are the six stations currently planned:

    West Alderwood — Connects to the area between Lynnwood and southwest Snohomish County neighborhoods currently underserved by rail.

    Ash Way — Positioned near the Ash Way Park-and-Ride on I-5, already a major transit hub for express bus commuters heading to Seattle.

    Mariner — Serves the Mariner community in south Everett near the I-5 and Highway 526 interchange.

    SW Everett Industrial Center — Located near Boeing’s primary Everett manufacturing campus. This is the station that puts light rail walking distance from one of the region’s largest employment sites. Targeted as the first endpoint of service in 2037.

    SR 526/Evergreen — Near Everett’s southern approaches, serving Paine Field-area commuters.

    Everett Station — The northern terminus, connecting Link directly to Everett’s Amtrak Cascades and Sounder commuter rail hub downtown. Full service here is targeted for 2041.

    A seventh provisional station at SR 99 and Airport Road is also being studied, though it is not currently funded and would need additional financial support to be included.

    The $500 Million Funding Gap — What It Actually Means

    We’re not going to bury the hard part: Sound Transit has a $500 million affordability gap on this project. That’s a real number from Sound Transit’s own project documents — not a rounding error or a worst-case scenario.

    In practice, Sound Transit is pursuing increased local, state, and federal funding while simultaneously exploring cost-reduction options — different construction approaches, phasing strategies, or station design changes that could bring the price down without cutting service quality.

    The ST3 System Plan — the broader 25-year transit expansion voters approved in 2016 — is also up for a structural review by the Sound Transit Board in summer 2026. The board is evaluating “different approaches to updating the ST3 System Plan,” which could include new ways to build, phase, or sequence projects, including the Everett extension.

    What this means practically: if the board decides to phase the project and build to the SW Everett Industrial Center station by 2037 first, then complete the final stretch to Everett Station later, the shape of the project changes significantly. If new funding closes the gap, the 2037/2041 timeline firms up. We’ll be tracking whatever comes out of those board discussions as they develop.

    What the Draft EIS Will Tell Us

    When Sound Transit releases the Draft EIS this year, it will contain:

    • The preferred alignment — the exact route the tracks follow
    • Station designs and footprint maps for all six locations
    • Property acquisition requirements
    • Environmental impact analysis: noise, traffic, wetlands, neighborhood effects
    • Community benefit assessments
    • The preferred location for the Operations and Maintenance Facility North (OMF North), a critical piece of system infrastructure targeted for a 2034 opening

    The public comment period following the Draft EIS release is the moment for Snohomish County residents to officially weigh in. Station design concerns, community impacts, park-and-ride configurations — all of that input gets recorded in the official planning record during this window.

    Why This Matters for Everett’s Development Boom

    We’ve spent a lot of time covering Everett’s physical transformation — the waterfront, the stadium project, the housing surge. Light rail sits underneath all of it as a long-term infrastructure bet.

    When Everett Station connects to the regional Link network, the entire corridor from downtown Everett to Seattle becomes a roughly 45-minute commute without a car. That changes the math on living in Everett for people working Seattle-based jobs. It changes what downtown Everett can support in terms of retail, restaurants, and density.

    The Port of Everett’s Millwright District, the new downtown stadium, the apartments going up near the transit center — every one of these projects is betting on a future where Everett is a complete city, not a staging area for a Seattle commute. The $500M funding gap and the 2037-2041 window is the biggest variable in that long-term calculation.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    When will the Everett Link Extension open?
    Sound Transit is targeting 2037 for service to the SW Everett Industrial Center station and 2041 for full service to Everett Station. Both timelines are contingent on closing a $500 million funding gap.

    How many stations will the Everett Link Extension have?
    Six stations are planned: West Alderwood, Ash Way, Mariner, SW Everett Industrial Center, SR 526/Evergreen, and Everett Station. A seventh station at SR 99/Airport Road is being studied but is not currently funded.

    What is the Everett Link Extension Draft EIS?
    The Draft Environmental Impact Statement is expected to be released in 2026. It identifies the preferred route alignment, station locations, and environmental and community impacts. There will be a public comment period after its release.

    How long is the Everett Link Extension?
    Approximately 16 miles of new light rail, running from the Lynnwood City Center terminus north to Everett Station.

    What is the $500 million funding gap?
    Sound Transit has identified a $500 million shortfall between current projected revenues and the estimated cost of the Everett Link Extension. The agency is pursuing additional local, state, and federal funding as well as cost-reduction options.

    What is the ST3 System Plan review?
    The Sound Transit Board is evaluating different approaches to updating the ST3 System Plan in summer 2026. This could include new ways to build, phase, or sequence projects — potentially affecting the Everett extension timeline.

    Will there be park-and-ride access at Everett Link stations?
    Yes. The Ash Way station connects to an existing major Park-and-Ride facility. Specific configurations at each station will be detailed in the Draft EIS.

    How does this connect to existing Everett transit?
    The extension terminates at Everett Station, which serves Sounder commuter rail and Amtrak Cascades. It will also connect with Community Transit bus routes throughout the corridor.

  • Government & Civic: SR-3 Belfair Bypass Gets $48.3M, Commissioner Meetings & Transit Board Update — Mason County Minute

    Government & Civic: SR-3 Belfair Bypass Gets $48.3M, Commissioner Meetings & Transit Board Update — Mason County Minute

    Big news for North Mason: State legislators Drew MacEwen, Dan Griffey, and Travis Couture have secured $48.3 million in the 2026 supplemental transportation budget for the SR-3 Freight Corridor project — the long-awaited Belfair Bypass. The 6-mile new highway will route through-traffic around downtown Belfair, with construction currently scheduled for 2027–2029. Environmental review is complete and land acquisition is well underway. This is the single largest infrastructure investment in North Mason in a generation.

    On the local government calendar, the Mason County Board of Commissioners met Monday, April 6 with the Clean Water District on the agenda. Briefings are held at the Courthouse in Shelton (411 N. 5th St.) and are also available via Zoom — a good habit to check in on if you want to know what’s happening with county water quality initiatives.

    Shelton City Council holds its regular business meeting Tuesday, April 7 at 6 p.m. at the Civic Center (525 W. Cota St.). And looking ahead, Mason Transit Authority holds its April board meeting on Tuesday, April 21 at 1 p.m. — this month at the Hoodsport Regional Library (40 N. Schoolhouse Rd., Hoodsport). The public is welcome to attend all of these.

    Civic Calendar & Key Updates

    • SR-3 Freight Corridor / Belfair Bypass: $48.3M secured in 2026 WA supplemental transportation budget. 6-mile new alignment routing around downtown Belfair. Construction: 2027–2029. Environmental review complete, land acquisition underway.
    • Mason County Commissioners: Regular briefings at 411 N. 5th St., Shelton + Zoom. Clean Water District updates ongoing. Check masoncountywa.gov for agendas.
    • Shelton City Council: Regular business meetings at 525 W. Cota St., 6 PM. Check ci.shelton.wa.us for full agenda.
    • Mason Transit Authority Board: April 21 at 1 PM, Hoodsport Regional Library, 40 N. Schoolhouse Rd., Hoodsport. Public welcome.

    Sources: WSDOT SR-3 Freight Corridor project page, WA State Fiscal LEAP Transportation Document 2026-2, Mason County Journal, MasonWebTV.com, Shelton City Council agenda, MasonTransit.org